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The Legend of Starcrash | 
| Author: Dolores Cannon Publisher: Ozark Mountain Publishing Inc Category: Book
List Price: $14.00 Buy New: $9.68 You Save: $4.32 (31%)
Rating: 4 reviews
Media: Paperback Pages: 250 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 8.3 x 5.5 x 0.6
ISBN: 0963277677 Dewey Decimal Number: 133.9013 EAN: 9780963277671 ASIN: 0963277677
Publication Date: January 1, 1994 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand New. Delivery is usually 5 - 8 working days from order, International is by Royal Mail Airmail
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| Customer Reviews:
Alien Awesome! August 17, 2008 Utahna Tassie (Salt Lake City, UT USA) We may soon find ourselves in this very situation! About 5,000 people had to leave their very overcrowded planet, knowing full well that they would be living on a space ship for several generations before reaching their destination (another planet where the atmosphere was compatible with their bodies) and that if they left, they were never to return (sounds like my parents when I was a teenager). One of the 3 ships had a serious malfunction (that was probably a result of tampering with a time-release sort of factor to sabotage them after the point of no return) and was forced to make a new home on Earth. It was a really great thing that they happened to land near a very remote, primitive civilization with no contact with the outside world. I could understand the fear both groups had for each other and the necessity to interbreed for the survival of both species. This story was told through a client under hypnosis who went to Dolores Cannon for therapy to help with a reoccurring dream. In the bigger picture, there are no accidents. I feel this legend is very true and correct.
Entertaining January 2, 2002 1 out of 10 found this review helpful
Just not believable. The reader has only the author's word to rely on. The author claims to know where this ship crashed, then why no rush to find artifacts.
Who Came First, the Chicken or the Egg, OR... January 18, 2000 20 out of 20 found this review helpful
Dolores Cannon's warm and inquisitive, yet non-obstinate approach in dealing with her subjects and their spirit entities under regressive hypnosis gives much credence to the integrity of the subject matter. This book stages the probable seeding and origin of our ancestors, and WOW!, is it a mindbender. Tuin, who is the main character and tribal hunter for the commune, delivers interesting insights to the societal structure and specialized importance each member's responsibility brings to the tribal commune. In a naive and innocent manner, Tuin relates his adventuresome and somewhat rascally personality within a warm and caring community, which in a primitive way appears more advanced and evolved than our current existence.That's not all! The latter part of the book, Dolores explores Tuin's higher spiritual nature, giving a sophisticated glimpse at the unfolding of human history. For those of you who have interest in the migration of man to North America and the Native American role in that perspective, this is a MUST book. Why, we even get a glimpse into to the effect of the great prehistorical asteroid hit on earth. Great, easy, and believable reading. An opportunity to enhance one's enlightenment.
Excellent review on the back cover of the book August 21, 1998 20 out of 20 found this review helpful
THE LEGEND OF STARCRASHThrough regressive hypnosis a lost legend of the history of mankind has been retrieved from the recesses of time. Did the American Indians descend from the inhabitants of an alien spacecraft that crashed in the Alaska-Canada region thousands of years ago? Keepers of the Garden told the story of the original seeding of the plant Earth by aliens from outer space. Starcrash indicates that aliens continued to come to Earth, some intentionally and by accident, throughout our history. In order to adjust to harsh conditions and the brutal rays of an alien sun, the survivors were forced to interbreed with the local aborigines. This was the only way to insure the survival of their race. Does their blood still flow in the veins of certain American Indian tribes?
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